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Some years ago I went to a lot of trouble to put together a 2D panel with XML gauges for the B737 from 50 North, in FS2004. I bought the ISG gauges to give me a realistic FMC. I flew with it a for a few months, updating and improving the gauges as I went, then tired of it...
I then spent a few months bringing my AI traffic bang up-to-date, but then realised that newer versions of AI aircraft, and flightplans to fly them, were coming out quicker than I could install them. So I grew tired of that exercise too..
I then went back over my old B737 XML gauges and brought them all up to the same standard - not a very good standard, I admit, but as best as I could achieve anyway. Then I flew the revamped B737 again for a short while and grew tired of it...
Recently I was given a Fathers Day present of a flight in a C172 simulator, a Redbird FMX, and flew low and slow around the local airports and airfields, touching and going. An enjoyable 45 minutes. No Autopilot or ILS landings - hands on only!
I SUCKED!!!
Despite a decade of simulated flying FS2000, FS2002 and FS2004!
Never kept level flight for more than a second or two; stalled; couldn't keep a heading; bounced really HARD on landing; shot off like a rocket or F-15 on take off. The instruments were correctly spread over the full sized panel and I just couldn't manage to keep my eyes on the ones that mattered and fly the aircraft at the same time (too used to a 23" screen and a mouse!). Soft hands, or some expression like that, the instructor said I needed - I definitely didn't have them, jerking the Cessna around like mad. With the simulated movement in the simulator one might have been airsick! I lived through it though. I blamed my performance on the fact that I had never used a yoke or rudder pedals, only a Microsoft Sidewinder. I get the impression that the instructor wasn't too impressed.
Anyway, this sparked off an interest in doing the same in my own FS2004. It all seemed like a good idea to fly the C172SP but really you get nowhere fast and almost nothing is automated. I was getting bored again...
I needed a goal.
Then I remembered a set of lessons I did from the internet when I started in FS2004 - to help me understand VORs, NDBs and ILS.
I went back and found the site - I had previously printed down all of the lessons but when I moved on the the 'sophisticated' B737 all the printouts were dumped. Busy printing again!
So I am back now using http://www.navfltsm.addr.com by Charles Wood. Learning all of the basics of navigation again. Flying a C172SP. When I did the lessons years ago I completed the course - I wonder will boredom set in yet again?
Does this flight simulator lifestyle ring bells with anyone else?
Walter
I then spent a few months bringing my AI traffic bang up-to-date, but then realised that newer versions of AI aircraft, and flightplans to fly them, were coming out quicker than I could install them. So I grew tired of that exercise too..
I then went back over my old B737 XML gauges and brought them all up to the same standard - not a very good standard, I admit, but as best as I could achieve anyway. Then I flew the revamped B737 again for a short while and grew tired of it...
Recently I was given a Fathers Day present of a flight in a C172 simulator, a Redbird FMX, and flew low and slow around the local airports and airfields, touching and going. An enjoyable 45 minutes. No Autopilot or ILS landings - hands on only!
I SUCKED!!!
Despite a decade of simulated flying FS2000, FS2002 and FS2004!
Never kept level flight for more than a second or two; stalled; couldn't keep a heading; bounced really HARD on landing; shot off like a rocket or F-15 on take off. The instruments were correctly spread over the full sized panel and I just couldn't manage to keep my eyes on the ones that mattered and fly the aircraft at the same time (too used to a 23" screen and a mouse!). Soft hands, or some expression like that, the instructor said I needed - I definitely didn't have them, jerking the Cessna around like mad. With the simulated movement in the simulator one might have been airsick! I lived through it though. I blamed my performance on the fact that I had never used a yoke or rudder pedals, only a Microsoft Sidewinder. I get the impression that the instructor wasn't too impressed.
Anyway, this sparked off an interest in doing the same in my own FS2004. It all seemed like a good idea to fly the C172SP but really you get nowhere fast and almost nothing is automated. I was getting bored again...
I needed a goal.
Then I remembered a set of lessons I did from the internet when I started in FS2004 - to help me understand VORs, NDBs and ILS.
I went back and found the site - I had previously printed down all of the lessons but when I moved on the the 'sophisticated' B737 all the printouts were dumped. Busy printing again!
So I am back now using http://www.navfltsm.addr.com by Charles Wood. Learning all of the basics of navigation again. Flying a C172SP. When I did the lessons years ago I completed the course - I wonder will boredom set in yet again?
Does this flight simulator lifestyle ring bells with anyone else?
Walter


